Wait, thats what you took from it, did i miss something? Obviously he was peeved at the lack of recognition from the interview, but i didnt put together that him going back to Albuquerque had to do with revenge on the Grey Matter people.Shrinweck wrote:Damn. People said that the machine gun definitely had something to do with Grey Matter but I just didn't really see it coming. So his return is entirely for spite and revenge, I guess. An interesting move. I guess he has enough information to assume Jesse is alive... I can't believe they're making us wait another week
Anarky wrote:"He is luckier than you."
So how was this? Given people being more and more intolerable in movie theaters I can only imagine how god damned annoying they are when in a similar arrangement for a television show where people often feel the right to make loud exclamations when something of note happens. Or was it okay because anyone who would go to something like this is a fan?Anarky wrote:Got lucky enough to buy two tickets to the Finale at Hollywood Forever. Sold out in seconds.
http://cinespia.ticketfly.com/event/363 ... s-angeles/
It was good, the crowd was well behaved and was quiet throughout the finale. We got to watch the Pilot, followed by about a 15 minute intermission and then the Final. Afterwards Jimmy Kimmel did a live Q&A with a good chunk of the cast. I'll try to upload some photos tomorrow.Shrinweck wrote:So how was this? Given people being more and more intolerable in movie theaters I can only imagine how god damned annoying they are when in a similar arrangement for a television show where people often feel the right to make loud exclamations when something of note happens. Or was it okay because anyone who would go to something like this is a fan?Anarky wrote:Got lucky enough to buy two tickets to the Finale at Hollywood Forever. Sold out in seconds.
http://cinespia.ticketfly.com/event/363 ... s-angeles/
Didn't realize we had another Republican here. I honestly thought Joe was the only one :-)Lox wrote:I can't wait to hear what everyone thinks of the finale. (Well, everyone except Zeus...I'm actually hiding your posts until we're done discussing...sorry, dude, I just can't take it).
Shrinweck wrote:
Edit: Wow an hour long Talking Bad... guess I might as well watch that.
I'll bite. Type it all out. But, maybe put it in spoiler tags so other people can continue to ignore you.Zeus wrote:If you guys wanna hear it, let me know. I'll explain to you exactly why the creators of this show made the last 2 season useless with the direction of the last few episodes
Yea, even my fiancee thought Walt was being his true abusive self during that scene. Women tend to have a different perspective since some of them have been through, or know someone who has been through an emotionally abusive relationship (which honestly Walt and Skyler's was).Flip wrote:A few weeks ago, that same writer admitted she didnt realize that THE Phone Call to Skyler was a trick to try and get the cops off Skyler's case until after she scoured forum boards post show. Nussbaum's initial take of things should always be taken with a grain of salt when you miss something that obvious.
No, no. The Hank-Walt confrontation NEEDED to happen. That was hanging over the show for the entire run and Hank was too close before. I was OK with it happening and woulda been disappointed if they just dropped it. But, much like nearly everything else with an AMC show, it was the execution that I was disappointed at.Flip wrote:I'll bite. Type it all out. But, maybe put it in spoiler tags so other people can continue to ignore you.Zeus wrote:If you guys wanna hear it, let me know. I'll explain to you exactly why the creators of this show made the last 2 season useless with the direction of the last few episodes
Are you trying to say the show could have ended after season 4 and didnt need Season 5 part I and II? Or, are you saying that Season 5 I and II should have gone a different route? If you have issues with the Hank/Walt conflict then I'm not sure what to tell you, because any show that has a drug kingpin and a DEA brother-in-law is obviously going to have a battkle between the two eventually and we've known of Hanks job since episode 1.
Not quite. I liked Season 6 of Dexter but not 8. I have called it the weakest season numerous times here. I liked the direction of the ending of the series (mostly the last couple of eps)....except for the last minute. That was retarded.Eric wrote:Sooooo to make sure we're clear Zeus liked Seasons 6 & 8 of Dexter and Dexter's finale, and didn't like Breaking Bad's last season and finale.
ok.
No? What was the point of him giving the money to his rich ex-friends and using his image as a brutal criminal mastermind to scare them into ensuring it happened after he was dead? What's the point of him giving Skylar the lottery ticket so they can find the bodies of Hank and Gomez to hopefully help her out with the FBI? NONE of that had to happen at all and both were the very first things he did after he got back to Albequerque. And there's nothing in it for him in either situation, they were purely to help out his family. That, my friend, is what a turnaround in character is all about.kali o. wrote:Hmmm, I don't like Breaking Bad as much as most of you (sure as hell not a sophisticated show, like say Sopranos) but I did enjoy it. That said, zeus you are talking nonsense. His redemption? Do you even know what that word means? Last ep had zero to do with that, he went full on Hiesenberg and buried Walt for good - that's all that was about. Saving Jesse was impulse, he went in there hoping to kill the kid at first.
Son still hates him, money may or may not ever get there, wife hates him and is in a world of shit, hank is still in a hole, threats are dead (Nazis and the Lydia) - redemption...are you serious?
Better known as "redemption"Shrinweck wrote:Going back to Albuquerque after realizing he was beyond redemption was him trying to make things as right as possible before he died.
Setting things right for his family and Jesse before he died of cancer is all about him redeeming himself of his past actions, trying to "fix" whatever he possibly couldShrinweck wrote:Redemption implies that he felt as if there was a chance that any future action of his could in any way clear him of his past deeds. This was not about that.
Yes, the damage is done. But all of his actions in the last episode and a half were about fixing whatever he could. He was buried up in that cabin, he had his money and coulda lived out the little life he had left with it. That is, after all, why he did everything. It was for the money. In the beginning it was for his family, afterwards it became for the greed. He admitted as much himself.Shrinweck wrote:He didn't "fix" anything. Everything he did was for himself. This extends to nearly everything in the last episode and even the entire series. Saving Jesse was the only impromptu selfless thing he did and that didn't end so well for him. He didn't redeem himself in anyone's eyes, including Jesse who may have killed him if he wasn't going to already die of his wound. He didn't even redeem himself in his own eyes since clearly he still felt like he deserved his fate.
Skylar is still screwed, they aren't going to just stop trying to pursue her because she makes a deal that helps them find a couple corpses. She'll probably still see the inside of a prison at some point. Flynn still hates him and will always hate him, even if he later finds out the money he ends up being able to support his family with is from his father. His life is basically still ruined. He's the son of a meth kingpin and soon he'll be the super rich son of a meth kingpin. It'll follow him around forever. Jesse is on the run. Even if they don't find traces of him all over the lab and whatever place they kept him, there's still a warrant out for his arrest since he was out on bail for throwing that cash around. His life is either avoiding the police forever or turning himself in.
The best explanation I've seen for the series is Pandora's Box. He opened it and unleashed all this hell. He had all these opportunities to turn around and start doing the right thing even after doing all these horrible things but just dug a hole too deep. He opened the box and he actually managed to close it (meaning all the evil that sprung up because of him was dealt with) before he died. The damage was still done. Even one of the show's producers says the end wasn't about redemption.
The show was about what greed, pride, and hubris can do to us. Not about a Walter's redemption.
But that's what annoyed me about the last ep and a half. It SHOULD have ended with him spiralling down the path to evil, where Heisenberg took over and there was no Walt left. And we saw for a season and a half at least where that kept on happening. The fact that he contracted Jack to kill Jesse was almost the last step. At that point, Walt's BS about protecting his family was almost BS to him and he knew it. Instead, for the end of the show, they bring Walt back and make him masquerade like Heisenberg to try to fix things.Shrinweck wrote:I kind of see what you're talking about but I feel as if we've watched two different shows and taken different things from them respectively. I like my show more
Yeah, Jesse started the path to shit and directly led to everything. If had left, Hank woulda had nothing other than his personal belief and pride and woulda had to find another way to get to Walt (through Saul, maybe? That woulda been neat).Eric wrote:You know, everything that happened in the last episodes was Jesse's fault. If he had just taken the bullshit Walt had fed him, and not decided he needed revenge for Brock being poisoned(who was still alive and well anyway), Hank wouldn't have gotten the solid evidence he needed, that trap wouldn't have happened, Hank would be alive, and his girlfriend would also be alive and Brock wouldn't be an orphan.
Am I simplifying things here or is this accurate? At the very least if Jesse had just left the girl would have been alive.